Home > Archive > Cobol > August 2007 > Browser standards was Re: field validation (was Re: COBOL/DB2 Date edit question)
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Browser standards was Re: field validation (was Re: COBOL/DB2 Date edit question)
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| Clark F Morris 2007-08-16, 6:55 pm |
| On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 09:10:23 -0600, Howard Brazee <howard@brazee.net>
wrote:
>On Fri, 17 Aug 2007 02:06:46 +1200, "Pete Dashwood"
><dashwood@removethis.enternet.co.nz> wrote:
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>Ahh, blame the (non) customer.
>
>But check around. Lots of people are because web sites want us
>to use Windows, I.E., and active-X. I am reporting facts that I
>have observed on newsgroups, and have observed in my workplace.
>
>If a company doesn't mind prospective customers being and not
>being able to use their sites - it doesn't matter whether the fault is
>those prospective customers' failure to conform to Microsoft's failure
>to conform. They won't be customers.
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>In fact, they will be anti-customers - sharing their anger with
>others.
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>Now companies are free to decide that IE is the de facto standard, and
>those using de jure standard browsers aren't worthwhile. That is
>their right. But designing around de jure standards isn't that
>expensive and is more inclusive. That's worth money. (It may be
>that you can't use MS designed tools though).
Just to add fuel to the fire, if your web-site is commercial or
government, in some countries including the United States the site is
required to be able to handle a person who has one of the following
disabilities: vision, hearing, motion (unable to use a mouse, has no
hands, etc.). The site does not have to be able to handle someone
like the late Helen Keller who was both blind and deaf.
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| Alistair 2007-08-16, 6:55 pm |
| On 16 Aug, 17:17, Clark F Morris <cfmpub...@ns.sympatico.ca> wrote:
> On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 09:10:23 -0600, Howard Brazee <how...@brazee.net>
> wrote:
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> Just to add fuel to the fire, if your web-site is commercial or
> government, in some countries including the United States the site is
> required to be able to handle a person who has one of the following
> disabilities: vision, hearing, motion (unable to use a mouse, has no
> hands, etc.). The site does not have to be able to handle someone
> like the late Helen Keller who was both blind and deaf. - Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Which part of BLIND does not encompass VISION?
Blind people are able to use one of a number of audio browsers but
that wouldn't help Helen Keller. However, there is a screen reader
which converts text to Braille available. How it would manage with
Pete's fluff and eye-candy is anyones guess.
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